Transcript Retrieval
Retrieval
Memory is Synaptic Change
New
memories = physiological changes in
the brain
making networks easier to fire by adjusting
the dendrite/neurotransmitters system.
The easier to fire, the easier linked memories
or concepts are to remember.
Illustrate?
Neurological Basis for memory
This stored ability for a circuit to fire is called:
Long Term Potentiation (LTP)
Lack of neural connections explains Infantile
Amnesia: the inability to remember episodic
memories before age 3.
you can, however, remember implicit: skill memory
• Where is that located in the brain? What does that lead us to
believe about brain development?
Memory Retrieval
To
retrieve a memory you must first have
some kind of retrieval cue
Examples?
Retrieval
Activating
one strand of a
schematic memory is called
priming.
Mnemonic devices encoding and mnemonic
retrieval
Speaking of schema…
What is a schema?
Framework that organizes ideas “This is a cow”
What is assimilation?
Interpreting new experience in terms of existing
schema: looks at moose, calls it a cow
What is accommodation?
Modifies schema to include items after learning
– discriminates between mama moose and baby
moose
Forgetting as Retrieval error.
If
we cannot remember
something, it could be that:
never encoded
difficulty retrieving it
• Interference of other memories are
common retrieval errors.
Interference Theory =
Proactive
Old
Retroactive
New
pro=
ahead, someone shooting an arrow
out ahead and it kills all the stuff up front
Retro
= rocket, the after-burn kills all the
stuff behind it
Forgetting as Retrieval error.
Proactive
interference:
You studied French for three years and then
decided to take Spanish in college. You may
find yourself retrieving French words or
pronouncing Spanish words with a French
accent.
Forgetting as Retrieval error
Retroactive
Interference:
Say you’ve been driving for a while and then
decide to learn a stick shift. Then when you
start driving an automatic, you slam on the
break with your left foot thinking it is a clutch.
Jill Price: The Woman Who Could
Not Forget
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SoxsMMV538
U
The Real Rain Man
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k2T45r5G3kA
BREAK
Prospective vs. Retrospective
MEMORY
Memory Construction is like a
mosaic
Our
memories are what we encode as well
as how we retrieve them.
Remember we encode information
semantically and may fill in the blanks with
details that aren’t correct, or color the memory
by the mood we are in.
Memory Construction: like a mosaic
Déjà
vu is often caused by the firing of network
by a cue that makes you believe you’ve
experienced the whole picture before,
recall vs. recognition
Tip of Tongue
Problem
of retrieval
Retrieval
Context effect: Putting yourself back
into the context where a memory was
formed may trigger that memory.
Going
by an old house, a smell of perfume
from a former girlfriend, or the smell of
autumn football, may bring back a flood of
memories.
Retrieval
State
dependent memory: the
state we are in influences the
memories that are retrieved.
When sad, happy, drunk whatever,
these become a retrieval cue.
Mood
Congruence:
when sad, we are likely to remember
events as being sadder than we thought
at the time or happier if happy.
Source Amnesia
Where
we got a memory from, the
source, on of weakest areas of memory.
Child studies
Piaget?
Neuro brain development?
Eyewitness Memory
Because
of source amnesia and
misinformation effect, eyewitness
memories are notoriously bad.
Elizabeth Loftus: Eyewitness
Faculty
recall confabulation
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcywPd
ORySA
Misinformation Effect
Similarly, we can encode a false memory if we
are led to believe something occurred that didn’t.
That memory will become just as real as memory of
an event that actually occurred.
We also fill in the gaps when retrieving
memories
retrieval cues offered can change the memory as it
comes out.
Retrieval activity
Repression or Motivated Forgetting
People seem to purposefully forget things
(motivated forgetting), but many
repressed memories that are recovered
seem to been planted, usually
unknowingly.
What
do you believe?
Amnesia
Retrograde amnesia – unable to recall before amnesia
(cases amnesia)
Anterograde amnesia – unable to recall after trauma
Damage to areas associated with declarative memories
Tumors, strokes, hypoxia, damage to prefrontal cortex
Concussion, car crash, ECT
Usually happens in hippocampus
Infantile amnesia
Source amnesia
Alzheimers
Clive Wearing:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OmkiMlvLKto